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Microparticles from Patients with Metabolic Syndrome Induce Vascular Hypo-Reactivity via Fas/Fas-Ligand Pathway in Mice

Microparticles are membrane vesicles with pro-inflammatory properties. Circulating levels of microparticles have previously been found to be elevated in patients with metabolic syndrome (MetS). The present study aimed to evaluate the effects of in vivo treatment with microparticles, from patients wi...

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Autores principales: Agouni, Abdelali, Ducluzeau, Pierre-Henri, Benameur, Tarek, Faure, Sébastien, Sladkova, Martina, Duluc, Lucie, Leftheriotis, Georges, Pechanova, Olga, Delibegovic, Mirela, Martinez, Maria Carmen, Andriantsitohaina, Ramaroson
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3217000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22110764
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027809
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author Agouni, Abdelali
Ducluzeau, Pierre-Henri
Benameur, Tarek
Faure, Sébastien
Sladkova, Martina
Duluc, Lucie
Leftheriotis, Georges
Pechanova, Olga
Delibegovic, Mirela
Martinez, Maria Carmen
Andriantsitohaina, Ramaroson
author_facet Agouni, Abdelali
Ducluzeau, Pierre-Henri
Benameur, Tarek
Faure, Sébastien
Sladkova, Martina
Duluc, Lucie
Leftheriotis, Georges
Pechanova, Olga
Delibegovic, Mirela
Martinez, Maria Carmen
Andriantsitohaina, Ramaroson
author_sort Agouni, Abdelali
collection PubMed
description Microparticles are membrane vesicles with pro-inflammatory properties. Circulating levels of microparticles have previously been found to be elevated in patients with metabolic syndrome (MetS). The present study aimed to evaluate the effects of in vivo treatment with microparticles, from patients with MetS and from healthy subjects (HS), on ex vivo vascular function in mice. Microparticles isolated from MetS patients or HS, or a vehicle were intravenously injected into mice, following which vascular reactivity in response to vasoconstrictor agonists was assessed by myography with respect to cyclo-oxygenase pathway, oxidative and nitrosative stress. Injection of microparticles from MetS patients into mice induced vascular hypo-reactivity in response to serotonin. Hypo-reactivity was associated with up-regulation of inducible NO-synthase and increased production of NO, and was reversed by the NO-synthase inhibitor (N(G)-nitro-L-arginine). The selective COX-2 inhibitor (NS398) reduced the contractile effect of serotonin in aortas from mice treated with vehicle or HS microparticles; however, this was not observed within mice treated with MetS microparticles, probably due to the ability of MetS microparticles to enhance prostacyclin. MetS microparticle-mediated vascular dysfunction was associated with increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) and enhanced expression of the NADPH oxidase subunits. Neutralization of the pro-inflammatory pathway Fas/FasL completely prevented vascular hypo-reactivity and the ability of MetS microparticles to enhance both inducible NO-synthase and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1). Our data provide evidence that microparticles from MetS patients induce ex vivo vascular dysfunction by increasing both ROS and NO release and by altering cyclo-oxygenase metabolites and MCP-1 through the Fas/FasL pathway.
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spelling pubmed-32170002011-11-21 Microparticles from Patients with Metabolic Syndrome Induce Vascular Hypo-Reactivity via Fas/Fas-Ligand Pathway in Mice Agouni, Abdelali Ducluzeau, Pierre-Henri Benameur, Tarek Faure, Sébastien Sladkova, Martina Duluc, Lucie Leftheriotis, Georges Pechanova, Olga Delibegovic, Mirela Martinez, Maria Carmen Andriantsitohaina, Ramaroson PLoS One Research Article Microparticles are membrane vesicles with pro-inflammatory properties. Circulating levels of microparticles have previously been found to be elevated in patients with metabolic syndrome (MetS). The present study aimed to evaluate the effects of in vivo treatment with microparticles, from patients with MetS and from healthy subjects (HS), on ex vivo vascular function in mice. Microparticles isolated from MetS patients or HS, or a vehicle were intravenously injected into mice, following which vascular reactivity in response to vasoconstrictor agonists was assessed by myography with respect to cyclo-oxygenase pathway, oxidative and nitrosative stress. Injection of microparticles from MetS patients into mice induced vascular hypo-reactivity in response to serotonin. Hypo-reactivity was associated with up-regulation of inducible NO-synthase and increased production of NO, and was reversed by the NO-synthase inhibitor (N(G)-nitro-L-arginine). The selective COX-2 inhibitor (NS398) reduced the contractile effect of serotonin in aortas from mice treated with vehicle or HS microparticles; however, this was not observed within mice treated with MetS microparticles, probably due to the ability of MetS microparticles to enhance prostacyclin. MetS microparticle-mediated vascular dysfunction was associated with increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) and enhanced expression of the NADPH oxidase subunits. Neutralization of the pro-inflammatory pathway Fas/FasL completely prevented vascular hypo-reactivity and the ability of MetS microparticles to enhance both inducible NO-synthase and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1). Our data provide evidence that microparticles from MetS patients induce ex vivo vascular dysfunction by increasing both ROS and NO release and by altering cyclo-oxygenase metabolites and MCP-1 through the Fas/FasL pathway. Public Library of Science 2011-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3217000/ /pubmed/22110764 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027809 Text en Agouni et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Agouni, Abdelali
Ducluzeau, Pierre-Henri
Benameur, Tarek
Faure, Sébastien
Sladkova, Martina
Duluc, Lucie
Leftheriotis, Georges
Pechanova, Olga
Delibegovic, Mirela
Martinez, Maria Carmen
Andriantsitohaina, Ramaroson
Microparticles from Patients with Metabolic Syndrome Induce Vascular Hypo-Reactivity via Fas/Fas-Ligand Pathway in Mice
title Microparticles from Patients with Metabolic Syndrome Induce Vascular Hypo-Reactivity via Fas/Fas-Ligand Pathway in Mice
title_full Microparticles from Patients with Metabolic Syndrome Induce Vascular Hypo-Reactivity via Fas/Fas-Ligand Pathway in Mice
title_fullStr Microparticles from Patients with Metabolic Syndrome Induce Vascular Hypo-Reactivity via Fas/Fas-Ligand Pathway in Mice
title_full_unstemmed Microparticles from Patients with Metabolic Syndrome Induce Vascular Hypo-Reactivity via Fas/Fas-Ligand Pathway in Mice
title_short Microparticles from Patients with Metabolic Syndrome Induce Vascular Hypo-Reactivity via Fas/Fas-Ligand Pathway in Mice
title_sort microparticles from patients with metabolic syndrome induce vascular hypo-reactivity via fas/fas-ligand pathway in mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3217000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22110764
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027809
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